However, minority leader John Mbadi created relevance the bribery claims when he shot up to oppose amendments to the report. majority leader Aden Duale also gave credence to reports that MPs pocketed paltry amounts to sacrifice the public interest.

Keter, one of the most vocal legislators opposed to the report, said he was not compromised by anyone.

“I heard that from the media. I was not compromised. They have no capacity to compromise Keter,” he said on Friday.

He spoke during the joint retreat of the Procedure and House Rules Committee, House Business Committee and the Liaison Committee at Serena Beach Hotel in Mombasa.

The lawmaker pointed out that the report victimised people who had nothing to do with specific answers on the safety of sugar, as asked by people including Samburu West MP Naisula Lesuuda.

Keter also said the joint agriculture and trade committee that tabled the report formulated its own questions and answered them.

The MP recommended that other house committees pick aspects of the document for their own investigations, a suggestion that his Suna East counterpart Junet Mohamed opposed.

Junet said no other committee should use public resources for a probe based on the report that MPs termed shoddy and off mark.

“This matter does not need any more House committees to be probed,” he said, but noted that the rejection of the report does not mean the end of the investigation.

“Institutions like the DCI and the Government Chemist must take up the matter,” he said.

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